Omar Abdullah

Omar Abdullah, (born March 10, 1970, Rochford, Essex, England), Indian politician and government official who served as chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir state, northwestern India, from 2009 to 2015.

Omar’s privileged pedigree facilitated his rapid rise in politics. In 1998, at the age of 28, he was elected to the Lok Sabha (lower house of the Indian parliament) as a member of the JKNC. He was reelected to that chamber one year later and became a minister in the Commerce and Industry Ministry in the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government. In 2001 he was named minister for external affairs in the NDA government, the youngest to hold that portfolio. His tenure lasted only 17 months, however, as he resigned from the post in December 2002 to concentrate on the JKNC’s preparations for the state assembly elections.

In June 2002 he had become president of the JKNC, replacing his father, and remained in that office until 2009. Omar’s political career at the state level started badly, however: in the 2002 elections the ruling JKNC lost more than half of the 57 assembly seats it had garnered in 1996; Omar contested and lost his seat to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) candidate; and the PDP, with the Indian National Congress (Congress Party) and smaller parties, formed a coalition government. In 2004 Omar was reelected to the Lok Sabha.

In the 2008 state assembly elections, Omar won his constituency, and the JKNC, with 28 seats and the support of the Congress Party, formed the new government in 2009. At the age of 38, Omar became the youngest chief minister of the state. He resigned from the presidency of the JKNC and was replaced by his father. In July 2009, after the opposition PDP had linked Omar to a 2006 sex scandal (in which underage girls were coerced into prostitution with the complicity of a variety of public officials), he submitted his resignation, but his offer was turned down by the state’s governor.

Omar’s tenure as chief minister subsequently was marked by other upheavals, especially a number of allegations focused on human rights violations by the security forces fighting separatist militancy in the state. Omar was known to be critical of such excesses and asked repeatedly that the powers of the army be curbed and that the controversial Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), which facilitates such abuses, be repealed.

Omar continued to uphold the Abdullah family’s long-standing support for Jammu and Kashmir’s presence within the Indian union. However, he also sought ways to end the dispute between India and Pakistan over the Kashmir region, including meeting with Pervez Musharraf, then president of Pakistan, in 2006. He stated his belief that a grant of autonomy to Jammu and Kashmir would strengthen the bond between the state and India. Although Omar won one of the two seats that he was contesting in the 2014 state legislative elections, the JKNC lost its plurality of members in the chamber to the PDP. He announced his resignation as chief minister in late December and stepped down from office in early January 2015.